Why Sales Training Doesn’t Work And What to Do About It!

Why Sales Training Doesn’t Work
And What to Do About It!
Imparta White Paper Why Sales Training Doesn’t Work
Selling isn’t a great sport in which to come second. In the world of “winner takes all”,
anything that gives you a small increase in performance relative to the competition
can have a huge impact on your performance. It’s no surprise, therefore, that
salespeople and business developers are some of the most frequently trained
individuals in the business world.
And yet…we all know that much of the time, sales training has little impact. While the
event may be great, and intentions good, all too quickly, salespeople revert to known
behaviours.
Why is this? And what can we do about it?
Does sales training work?
The research shows that a great deal
of sales training doesn’t have the
impact that it was intended to have. For
example:
• Up to 80% of new skills are lost within 1
week of training if not used - ASTD
• Up to 85% of sales training fails to
deliver a positive ROI – HR Chally
• 87% of new skills are lost within a
month of the training – Xerox
Achieving significant impact is difficult,
and requires far more than a great
training event. For example, one client
invested heavily in communication
and training around the role of sales
managers as coaches. The training
was extremely well received and clear
expectations were set, yet when the
take-up of coaching was measured a
month after the training, fewer than 15%
of managers had come close to meeting
the standards. Knowing this made it
possible to address the issue, and with
effort that figure is now closer to 60%
and growing. However, one shudders
to think how little changes after most
training.
What does this mean for your
organisation… and for you? How much
time and money has been wasted, but
more importantly, how much revenue
and growth has been forgone?
What’s going wrong?
Most training departments and vendors
understand that standalone training is
only part of the answer. But while most
are geared up for running excellent
training courses, following through is a
great deal harder. It’s also a much lower
margin activity than putting a trainer into
a room with a group of salespeople.
As a result, we see a lot of good words,
but with little impact. “Gain commitment
from the top”. “Align sales training with
other initiatives”. “Follow-through with
coaching”. All are correct, but none
seem to make much difference. Why?
Our research suggests some possible
reasons:
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© Imparta Ltd. 2013
Imparta White Paper Why Sales Training Doesn’t Work
Fundamentally, improving sales
performance is not simply about building
skills, but about changing how some very
specific types of individual behave in
their day to day life. Sales training isn’t
a fire-and-forget exercise; it’s only ever
going to be the beginning of the process.
Recognise any of these…?
• Account managers and business developers perceive changing their behaviour as
a risk;
• Sales training is often insufficiently tailored to be truly relevant and overcome that
risk;
• New skills are rarely applied straight away. As a result, they’ve faded by the time
they are applied so success is unlikely, which in turn makes another attempt very
unlikely;
• New approaches are rarely built into everyday tools and processes, whether that be
recruiting, account reviews, or performance appraisals;
• There is often a lack of genuine ongoing coaching, reinforcement and support;
• Sales leaders rarely continue to ask the right questions or measure whether
behaviours are changing.
The sad tale of Jill and Sam
If improving sales performance is about
changing human behaviour, it follows
that to get a grip on why even the best
training can fail to deliver, we need to get
down to the level of the individual and
their experience of the training process.
Please meet two salespeople for whom
training wasn’t enough: Jill Wilna, and
Sam Canna.
Sam is keen, but unable to perform. Let’s
take a closer look at their stories, to try
and understand how they got this way.
The field of situational leadership tells us
that there are two main dimensions that
affect an individual’s performance on a
specific task: their motivation (“Will”), and
their ability (“Skill”).
To give us a good coverage of the issues
involved, we have chosen Jill and Sam
from opposite corners of the Skill/Will
matrix. Jill is capable, but unmotivated.
Jill Wilna
Sam Canna
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© Imparta Ltd. 2013
Imparta White Paper Why Sales Training Doesn’t Work
Jill Wilna’s story
Jill walked out of the training course having been able to absorb the new skills, but
not convinced of their importance or relevance to her and her customers. This view
is reinforced because she doesn’t see others exhibiting the new behaviours, and she
is rapidly drawn back into her normal routine. There are no repercussions from this,
and her manager doesn’t even ask about it. Jill may use her new skills on occasion –
probably without realising it – but the bulk of the impact has been lost.
This is actually quite a complex sequence of events, but once the specific issues
have been identified, one can start to develop ways to resolve them, as shown below:
• Leverage early
adopters
• Build buzz
• Trumpet early
wins
• Real tailoring
• Rigorous
application,
in a coached
environment
• Force to use,
• Quantify
to get over the
impact of lost
‘adoption hurdle’
opportunities
• Build urgency
• Coaching skills
and tools
• Measure
coaching!
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© Imparta Ltd. 2013
Imparta White Paper Why Sales Training Doesn’t Work
Sam Canna’s tale
Sam’s experience is entirely different. Even though he put on a brave face and
commented about there being “nothing really new here”, he actually struggled
during the workshop. He left keen to apply what he had learned, but he’s now a bit
overwhelmed and doesn’t know where to start. When he tries to apply his new skills,
he finds it difficult and time-consuming, and the results don’t seem to follow. His
manager is keen to help, but lacks the right skill in coaching and/or the new sales
techniques to make much of a difference.
As with Jill, it’s possible to create strategies to overcome each of the specific barriers
faced by Sam as he tries to apply his new skills:
• Streaming
• Clear action
plans driving
application
• Focus on
subset of
skills
• Reconnect
workshops
• Account clinics • Application
tools and
• Help desk
resources
• Self-study
• Model desired
• e.g. around
• Attend course
behaviour
vertical
again as coach
markets
• Coaching
and ‘home
schooling’
• Use early
adopters as
advisors
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© Imparta Ltd. 2013
Imparta White Paper Why Sales Training Doesn’t Work
Turning it around
As with most change management problems, there is no single “silver bullet” that
will improve the effectiveness of sales training; the solution is multi-faceted, and the
follow-up process is one that deserves to be treated seriously and managed hard.
After all, what would be the impact on your business if every salesperson was 10%
more effective?
Nevertheless, no good change program can afford to be too complex. So here, based
on Imparta’s experience of global sales effectiveness rollouts, is our list of the Top 10
Things to Make Sales Training Work:
10. Start from the top to design the rollout process, and gain commitment to the
leaders’ roles;
9. Focus the training on key skill gaps to avoid overwhelming people;
8. Tailor (really tailor it!) it to different groups to ensure relevance while creating a
common language across the organisation;
7. Quantify the impact of not applying new behaviours; publicise and celebrate
successes;
6. Build the new approaches into your everyday tools and processes (e.g. sales
reviews, account planning meetings, performance reviews);
5. Use managers and early adopters to coach. And then coach them on how well
they’re coaching;
4. Think about this as change management. Consider both skill and will;
3. Get people to apply skills right after the course itself. Check that they have;
2. Create pull-through by having salespeople report achievements to senior team
after a period (say 3-6 months, depending on your cycle time);
And our number one:
1. Measure results. This can be as formal as a business impact study, or as
informal as asking the right questions on a regular basis – but measure results. If
you don’t, there won’t be any.
As with any change process, you can expect to see a gradual take-up of new
behaviours and skills. There will always be early adopters, and there will always be
people who are never going to adapt (see Fig 1. overleaf). The challenge is to reach
the main-stream as quickly and effectively as possible.
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© Imparta Ltd. 2013
Imparta White Paper Why Sales Training Doesn’t Work
May be too much effort
Main-streamers
Pockets of excellence
“Early Adopters”
Time/Resource
Fig 1. Typical Adoption Curve
The good news is that getting it right can have a significant impact. Imparta’s clients
have measured revenue increases of up to £60m (approx. US$100m) from properly
implemented programmes, and when coaching is embedded as a way of life, these
programmes continue to deliver results long after the initial investment.
Next steps
If you’re involved in improving sales performance, whether as a business or sales
leader, or from the HR/Learning and Development side, here are a few questions to
help determine whether you need to take a fresh look at your top-line performance.
Do you have...
• An understanding of where the strengths and weaknesses of your current process
lie, and what the impact might be of improving deal size, cycle time and conversion
rates?
• A strategy for managing sales effectiveness as a change process?
• A clear roadmap that includes core training but goes well beyond to incorporate
reinforcement, coaching and application?
• A robust process for measuring training impact at various levels (reaction,
knowledge transfer; behaviour change; business impact)?
• Alignment between the wider the organisation (including marketing, service and
operations) and your sales strategy?
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© Imparta Ltd. 2013
Imparta White Paper Why Sales Training Doesn’t Work
About the author
Richard Barkey is the founder and Chief Executive of Imparta, a company that
specialises in helping companies around the world to achieve and sustain significant
improvements in sales and marketing performance.
Prior to founding Imparta in 1998, Richard worked at McKinsey & Co., where he was
involved in planning and implementing large-scale change management projects
involving, for example, a major UK retail bank, the sales force of an aggregates
company, and a major UK supermarket chain. In his last three years at McKinsey,
Richard pioneered the development of simulation-based training and it was this work
that sowed the seeds for Imparta.
Richard holds a first class degree in Engineering from Cambridge University and an
MBA with Distinction from the Harvard Business School. He is a sought-after speaker
on topics to do with learning and e-learning, sales and strategy.
About Imparta
Imparta helps companies to achieve significant and lasting improvements in
sales and marketing effectiveness, combining researched content with a deep
understanding of how adults learn, and how to overcome barriers to change.
Imparta’s tailored, “best of breed” approach ranges from a single workshop, to
a sophisticated simulation-based learning or a full Sales or Marketing Academy
covering the full range of reinforcement, application, coaching, measurement and
accreditation.
The company is already one of the largest sales and marketing training companies in
the UK, and has featured two years running in the Times TechTrack Top 100 for the
fastest-growing technology-based businesses. Imparta is global in scope, with clients
including GE, O2, HP, MeadWestvaco, Lucent and WPP. You can find Imparta at
www.imparta.com.
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© Imparta Ltd. 2013